Abstract

BackgroundCurrently available injectable agents are inadequate to address the high drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) burden in China. Regimens including the oral agent bedaquiline have been shown to be efficacious and safe, leading to its incorporation into multiple national TB treatment programs. This analysis evaluated the impact of increased adoption of bedaquiline-containing regimens on the DR-TB burden in China.MethodsA state-transition model was developed that permits movement and interaction between susceptible, latent, and active TB disease states, while distinguishing between drug-sensitive (DS) and DR-TB. Model inputs were obtained from the published literature or derived such that model metrics approximated those published by the WHO. Expected improvements in infrastructure were built into the model to forecast the epidemiology of DR-TB in China through 2040 in the absence of bedaquiline (baseline forecast). The impact of higher utilization of bedaquiline-containing regimens (85% peak share) was then assessed in two scenarios that differed with regard to treatment success rates of the regimens: 61% (reflecting findings of clinical trials) and 80% (reflecting data from observational studies), versus the 44% success rate associated with standard-of-care treatment.ResultsIn the baseline scenario, the model predicted increases in annual incidence of DR-TB by 6–8% during each five-year period between 2020 and 2040, with an increase of 30% over the entire study duration. Adoption of bedaquiline-based regimens limits the incidence increases to only 1–3% in each five-year period and to 8% over the study duration in the 61% success rate scenario. Incidence declines by 1–6% during each five-year period and by 12% over the study duration in the 80% success rate scenario. Similar effects on DR-TB prevalence (4–5% increase in baseline, 0–7% decline in scenario 1, and 4–19% decline in scenario 2) and mortality (5–7% increase in baseline, 0–16% decline in scenario 1, and 6–40% decline in scenario 2) were seen following bedaquiline adoption.ConclusionsIncorporation of bedaquiline into DR-TB treatment regimens will significantly reduce the DR-TB burden in China, helping to counter the expected increase in burden in the absence of bedaquiline. The study will provide valuable information to public health policy planners.

Highlights

  • Available injectable agents are inadequate to address the high drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) burden in China

  • Scenarios evaluated based on different success rates assumed for bedaquiline In the first scenario of bedaquiline utilization (61% treatment success rate), incidence was predicted to increase at significantly lower rates than in the baseline scenario, whether viewed in five-year intervals or over the entire duration of the analysis (Table 5 and Fig. 2)

  • The current burden of DR-TB in China is sizeable according to recent estimates published by the World Health Organization (WHO) [1], and threatens to undo the significant progress made in the treatment of TB by the nationwide implementation of the DOTS strategy in 2005 [3]

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Summary

Introduction

To tackle the high disease burden on a priority basis, the Chinese government introduced the Directly Observed Treatment, Short Course (DOTS) strategy in 13 provinces that encompassed 50% of the Chinese population in 1991, expanding it nationwide in 2005 [2, 3]. These efforts enabled China to meet the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of a reduction in TB-related morbidity and mortality by 50% by 2015 [4]. Given the available treatment choices, the overall treatment success rate for DR-TB was reported to be less than 50% in 2015 [6]; this results in continued propagation of the transmission cycle by the treatment-failed patients as they infect the susceptible population

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